Just checking out some of my substrate under the microscope and found this weird thing. It's a tangle of some kind of filaments, but it is moving. Any ideas? I know what the little Coolia is there next to it. No clue what this is though.
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That's what I would have thought, but this was taken under a microscope on a slide. No flow involved. Watching it longer, it was clear that the filaments are motile. They were rhythmic movements.Im thinking red turf algae getting moved around in the flow.
I've got a little camera that replaces the eyepiece and it just connects to the *** outer with USB. It's a pretty cheap microscope, but it gets the job done!Very cool looking, I love seeing all the exotic marine life.
How do You get these pictures thru a scope?
You know, under higher magnification it does have that segmented appearance like certain cyanos. I'll take it over the dinos I dealt with last fall and winter. I'll see if I can hunt more down.I say microscopic filamentous algae. The movement you are seeing is from Brownian Motion. And if we wish to talk about common microscopic filamentous algae we find in our tanks, we're talking cyanobacteria :eek::
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Just checking out some of my substrate under the microscope and found this weird thing. It's a tangle of some kind of filaments, but it is moving. Any ideas?